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Opportunistic financial reporting around municipal bond issues
Are earnings better than cash flows at predicting future cash flows? Evidence from apples-to-apples comparisons
Audit Firm Industry Specialization and Client Disclosure Quality
Do corporations manage earnings to meet/exceed analyst forecasts? Evidence from pension plan assumption changes
Asymmetric motivated reasoning in investor judgment
Stock Price Behavior Around Announcements of Write-Offs
Analyst information precision and small earnings surprises
This study proposes and tests an alternative to the extant earnings management explanation for zero and small positive earnings surprises (i.e., analyst forecast errors). We argue that analysts’ ability to strategically induce slight pessimism in earnings forecasts varies with the precision of their information. Accordingly, we predict that the probability that a firm reports a small positive instead of a small negative earnings surprise is negatively related to earnings forecast uncertainty, and we present evidence consistent with this prediction. Our findings have important implications for the earnings management interpretation of the asymmetry around zero in the frequency distribution of earnings surprises. We demonstrate how empirically controlling for earnings forecast uncertainty can materially change inferences in studies that employ the incidence of zero and small positive earnings surprises to categorize firms as suspected of managing earnings.